Wednesday, February 14, 2024

[PaleoMammalogy • 2024] Valenictus sheperdi • Tusked Walruses (Carnivora: Odobenidae) from the Miocene–Pliocene Purisima Formation of Santa Cruz, California (U.S.A.): A New Species of the Toothless Walrus Valenictus and the Oldest Records of Odobeninae and Odobenini


Valenictus sheperdi
R. Boessenecker, Poust, S. Boessenecker & Churchill. 2024

 
ABSTRACT
Currently limited to cold climates near the Arctic circle, living walruses are the sole survivors of a previously much more diverse clade that occupied coastal waters throughout the northern hemisphere during the Mio–Pliocene. Though pinniped faunas have the highest diversity of walruses in the Miocene, the Purisima Formation of California records a moderately diverse assemblage of four walrus species. We report new specimens of tusked walruses (Odobeninae) including the oldest known members of Odobeninae, and Odobenini, and fossils of the specialized toothless odobenine walrus Valenictus Mitchell, 1961. Among these is the new species Valenictus sheperdi sp. nov., represented by a complete skull and referred post-crania from lower Pliocene strata within the Purisima Formation (5.33–4.89 Ma). Additionally, we report a geochronologically younger skull of Valenictus chulavistensis Deméré, 1994 from further up section (4.89–3.59 Ma). Expanded phylogenetic analysis recovers Odobeninae including Ontocetus Leidy, 1859 as the earliest diverging lineage in the Odobenini, and places a monophyletic Valenictus as the sister taxon to Pliopedia, Kellogg, 1921 which is included in a phylogeny for the first time; Odobenus is sister to the Valenictus + Pliopedia clade. Discovery of an isolated metacarpal near the base of the formation provides the oldest known well-dated evidence of odobenines. A diverse assemblage of molluskivores characterized the Neogene eastern North Pacific and their extinction around the Pliocene–Pleistocene boundary coincided with tectonically driven paleogeographic changes on the Pacific coast. The loss of temperate walruses may have provided opportunities for both new molluskivores and the otariid and phocid pinnipeds that make up present North Pacific pinniped communities.


New life restoration of the extinct "toothless" walrus Valenictus sheperdi - cruising along in an early kelp forest along the shoreline of northern California during the early Pliocene epoch.
 Illustration by Robert Boessenecker 

Robert W. Boessenecker, Ashley W. Poust, Sarah J. Boessenecker and Morgan Churchill. 2024. Tusked Walruses (Carnivora: Odobenidae) from the Miocene–Pliocene Purisima Formation of Santa Cruz, California (U.S.A.): A New Species of the Toothless Walrus Valenictus and the Oldest Records of Odobeninae and Odobenini. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. e2296567. DOI: 10.1080/02724634.2023.2296567

Valenictus sheperdi and friends: Miocene-Pliocene tusked walruses from the Purisima Formation in Santa Cruz, California